By C. Bryson Hull
NAIROBI (Reuters) - The criticism could have come from any
Kenyan -- parliamentarians are lazy, dishonest, tribalistic and
selfish.
But this time the barbs came from one of parliament's own,
Speaker Francis ole Kaparo.
"There is no political loyalty. We are loyal to our seats
and pockets and to develop our stomach," the veteran lawmaker
told young legislators recently, drawing threats of censure.
Kaparo's tirade struck a chord with many who feel their MPs
have failed to deliver much of anything -- let alone promised
reforms including a new constitution -- while enjoying money
and perks most in the poor east African nation can only dream
about.
"We're not happy with the way they are behaving. They go to
parliament to quarrel and act like children," said Peter, a
security guard who declined to give his surname. "Their work is
to fool us. They have not done what they promised."
Anger over the handling of constitutional reform by
President Mwai Kibaki and parliament touched off violence last
week in Nairobi. One person was killed as stone-throwing
protesters and looters battled riot police across the city.
Protesters said a small clique of MPs had come up with a
draft of the constitution which hands too much power to the
president and ignores the wishes of ordinary Kenyans.
So far this year, parliament has passed only one bill -- a
reform of public procurement laws demanded by donors seeking to
stamp out corruption.
But it took two days to do so because only 32 of 222 MPs
came to vote, and their numbers often dipped below the quorum
of 30 and ground debate to a halt.
Some 60 MPs who traveled to a retreat to study the bill at
an upmarket hotel near the Indian Ocean resort of Mombasa never
bothered to vote. Such trips are frequent and often provoke
bitter laughs from Kenyans.
Western nations, with their current mantra of good
governance in Africa, are unlikely to be impressed either.
"WASTING OUR TIME"
Elected on a reform platform in 2002, promising to revamp
government and sweep away the corruption and lethargy of former
President Daniel arap Moi's 24-year regime, the current
parliament has left many Kenyans wondering what they got for
their votes.
"Most of them are wasting our time. I don't have any
confidence in parliament these days. What they tell us, they
don't do it," said Rose Makayo, a shoe saleswoman.
Kaparo's criticism -- his most pointed yet -- followed
months of chiding fellow MPs for poor attendance, ignorance of
house rules and endless travel on retreats he said created the
impression of conflicts of interest.
Where earlier parliaments were weak puppets of Moi's
wishes, the current edition's votes in defiance of public
opinion and election promises prompted the Sunday Standard
newspaper to declare Kenya "a parliamentary dictatorship."
The very first act of the new MPs after their election was
to quadruple their salaries -- despite opinion polls showing 88
percent of Kenyans felt they were already paid too much.
They now earn about 6 million Kenya shillings ($78,640) a
year tax-free, with perks and allowances that commentators say
effectively double it.
Compare that to Kenya's average per-capita annual income of
33,000 Kenya shillings ($435), which has stayed essentially
flat since 2000, according to Kenya's central bank.
"The worst thing about it is the disparity of their incomes
with that of the ordinary Kenyans. How do you justify that?"
said Mutakha Kangu, a parliamentary critic and lawyer on the
committee reviewing Kenya's draft constitution.
LUXURY LIFESTYLES
MPs' perks include access to interest-free home and car
loans, which have put Mercedes-Benz sedans and luxury
four-wheel drive trucks -- obtained free of duty that can hit
80 percent -- in many of their driveways.
Some hire helicopters to fly them back to their
constituencies.
All receive health cover that can include a second spouse
and up to eight children. Local media even reported that some
MPs tried to get their mistresses covered.
Last month, MPs voted for a multi-million dollar upgrade of
parliament, prompting the Standard to remark: "This grandiose
project has overstepped the bounds of financial modesty in a
country where many cannot even afford a square meal."
An average Kenyan works five days a week. MPs work a total
of two days spread from Tuesday to Thursday for 28 weeks a
year.
"In a working nation, a parliament that has a calendar of
28 weeks and a week of two days, is it a working parliament?"
Kangu asked, recalling Kibaki's vision of a harder-working
nation.
Many MPs say they spend a lot of time in committees drawing
up new laws. But in 2004, just two major new bills and five
others amending existing legislation were passed, Kangu said.
They also moved quickly last year to quash a proposed
constitutional reform that would have allowed voters to recall
non-performing MPs.
The government said more parliamentary output would make
for better progress toward Kenya's development agenda.
"I don't like to comment on parliamentary affairs, as they
tend to get excited," government spokesman Alfred Mutua said,
provoking laughter at a weekly press conference. "As a
government, we like to see bills passed."
(Additional reporting by Garrick Anderson)
Source: REUTERS
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